Frontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia

African approaches to development have shifted, particularly in north-eastern Africa. Donor-driven policies have given way to state-led development ‘visions’, often with a focus on large-scale infrastructure projects – feeding into and reflecting ‘Africa Rising’ discourses. In Kenya and Ethiopia, th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mosley, J, Watson, E
Format: Journal article
Published: Routledge 2016
_version_ 1797098261783248896
author Mosley, J
Watson, E
author_facet Mosley, J
Watson, E
author_sort Mosley, J
collection OXFORD
description African approaches to development have shifted, particularly in north-eastern Africa. Donor-driven policies have given way to state-led development ‘visions’, often with a focus on large-scale infrastructure projects – feeding into and reflecting ‘Africa Rising’ discourses. In Kenya and Ethiopia, these visions include flagship projects in the geographical frontiers, areas previously viewed as buffer zones, whose people have been historically marginalised. This paper adapts the analytical framework from James Scott’s Seeing Like a State in order to compare Kenya’s and Ethiopia’s state visions, and to understand the risks to the populations intended to benefit from such visions from the unintended (but predictable) consequences such projects have had in the past.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T05:07:02Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:da457a4a-0d8b-4377-8322-9a5df61be76a
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T05:07:02Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Routledge
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:da457a4a-0d8b-4377-8322-9a5df61be76a2022-03-27T09:02:04ZFrontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern EthiopiaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:da457a4a-0d8b-4377-8322-9a5df61be76aSymplectic Elements at OxfordRoutledge2016Mosley, JWatson, EAfrican approaches to development have shifted, particularly in north-eastern Africa. Donor-driven policies have given way to state-led development ‘visions’, often with a focus on large-scale infrastructure projects – feeding into and reflecting ‘Africa Rising’ discourses. In Kenya and Ethiopia, these visions include flagship projects in the geographical frontiers, areas previously viewed as buffer zones, whose people have been historically marginalised. This paper adapts the analytical framework from James Scott’s Seeing Like a State in order to compare Kenya’s and Ethiopia’s state visions, and to understand the risks to the populations intended to benefit from such visions from the unintended (but predictable) consequences such projects have had in the past.
spellingShingle Mosley, J
Watson, E
Frontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia
title Frontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia
title_full Frontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Frontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Frontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia
title_short Frontier transformations: development visions, spaces and processes in Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia
title_sort frontier transformations development visions spaces and processes in northern kenya and southern ethiopia
work_keys_str_mv AT mosleyj frontiertransformationsdevelopmentvisionsspacesandprocessesinnorthernkenyaandsouthernethiopia
AT watsone frontiertransformationsdevelopmentvisionsspacesandprocessesinnorthernkenyaandsouthernethiopia